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Dive deep into the timeless debate of why good people suffer through this analysis of the Book of Job, exploring themes of justice, human suffering, and righteousness.
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The Book Job or Why do bad things happen to good people? RP1080, The Bible as Literature, Craig Ho, HKBU
約伯記 (Job) • Authorship: anonymous; Jewish tradition attributed it to Moses but is no more than a pious pronouncement and should not be taken seriously. • Date: not sure, between 600 - 250 B.C. • Form: a drama in the form of a debate written in poetry with some prose at the beginning and the end. • Theme: the justice of God or Why does the righteous suffer? Job
The problem of injustice • What kind of man is Job and why does he suffer? • Righteous, blameless • Satan’s test with God’s approval: Is Job’ s piety motivated by self-interest? • What is Job’s first reaction to his suffering? Why does he behave like that? • desires his own non-existence • suffering is pointless, suffering is absurd, death is better than unended suffering Job
Job’s understanding and his wife’s response • How does Job explain the cause of his suffering? • it is from God • but he does not deserve it • How does Job’s wife respond to his suffering? Job
Eliphaz ’s explanation • How does Eliphaz explain Job’s suffering? • he doubts Job’s piety • it is a punishment for his evil • it is God’s trial and he will heal • What is Job’s response to Eliphaz’s theory? • he is being unfair and unjust • Job maintains his righteousness Job
Bildad’s explanation • How does Bildad explain Job’s suffering? • God is just • Job is punished for the sin of his children • God will not forsake a righteous man and will not help an evil man • What is Job’s response to Bildad ’s theory? • no man can be perfect in God’s sight • Job maintains his righteousness • The end of good and evil men is the same • God is the ultimate cause of human injustice Job
Zophar’s explanation • How does Zophar explain Job’s suffering? • Job is arrogant • Job should repent immediately instead of boasting about his righteousness • What is Job’s response to Zophar ’s theory? • Job insists his integrity. • There is nothing new in the friends’ theories • The defence for God’s justice will not suceed Job
The main issues • What are the main issues in the debate? • Is Job a sinner? • Is God just? • Why bad things happen to good people? • Why do the innocent suffer? Job
Summary of the dialogues • Job’ s friends: We can’t expect God to tell us what we are being punished for. We are accountable to him not he to us! Nobody is perfect and God knows what he is doing. • Job’s reply: I am not perfect but God cannot be just if more wicked people remain unpunished and the innocent suffer! • Friends: You deserve what you are suffering from because you are proud, arrogant, and impatient, and blasphemous! Job
The logic of the debate: theodicy • The logic of the argument of the whole book – the following three statements (p. 37) cannot be true at the same time, at lease one of them has to be denied: • God is all powerful and causes everything that happens in the world. Nothing happens without His willing it. • God is just and fair , and stands for people getting what they deserve, so that the good prosper and the wicked are punished. • Job is a good person. Job
The points of view • Which one do Job’s friends deny? • Which one does Job deny? • Which one does the author of the book of Job deny? • Problem of denying (c): “blaming the victim so that evil doesn’t seem quite so irrational and threatening. ... It makes everyone feel better – except the victim, who now suffers the double abuse of social condemnation no top of his original misfortune.” (p. 39) Job
... • Problem of denying (b): it makes ethical decision meaningless because “we live in an unjust world, from which we cannot expect fairness. There is a God, but He is free of the limitations of justice and righteousness.” (p.41) Job
... • Problem of denying (a): we lose the assurance of being ruled by an all-wise and all-powerful God • The idea of a non-ominpotent God : • The constancy of natural law. • The experience of chance and luck. • The experience of human autonomy. • => All necessary ingredients of an open universe. => God cannot be omnipotent with respect to justice and suffering. • The idea of a powerless / suffering God => Jesus as the suffering innocent man (Luke 23: 47) Job